I used to. Especially since my spouse has little interest in these matters.
I decided to bite the bullet and engaged a fee for service financial advisor for the past 13 years or so. Part of the reason was to consolidate our investments and have some financial advice that DW could depend on should I get hit by a bus.
Now, I am at the point where I may look at the numbers every month or so but more often than not every quarter. I no longer fret if this or that went down a little or should I sell this one. The conversation is about allocations, risk, tax liabilities, and edu funds for each of our grandchildren.
I have confidence in the firm and in the advisory team. I am not looking for the highest return. I am looking for a reasonable return based on market conditions, based on my age and how adverse I am to risk.
I have far more financial resources than I imagined that I would ever have. I followed the advisor's advice 12 years ago and exercised most of my stock options at $44-52 against the strong advice of several of my knowledgeable colleagues. The stock subsequently hit 54, then it was gradually down to $15 in a year or so. Slightly under my strike price. Following the investment team's strong advice along with the reasoning behind that advice to me at that time was worth 7 figures to me.